Russia Charges Greenpeace with Piracy

Greenpeace activists detained as they try to board the Prirazlomnaya offshore oil platform in the Pechora Sea to protest against oil drilling in the Arctic.

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10DevastatingOilSpillDisasters:Photos

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If we judged the worst oil spills in history only by gallons leaked, the Exxon Valdez disaster -- which occurred 25 years ago today -- would not make the list. However, adding in environmental impacts and clean-up efforts, it's still recognized as one of most damaging spills to date.
In 2009, Exxon Mobil Corp. was ordered to pay about $500 million in interest on punitive damages for the oil spill off Alaska, nearly doubling the payout to Alaska Natives, fishermen, business owners and others harmed by the 1989 disaster.
Debate continues over what qualifies as an oil "disaster," but here are 10 that would certainly make the list.
BLOG: Sea Otters Finally Rebound From Exxon Valdez

AP Photo/Petar Petrov

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As the largest oil spill disaster in U.S. history, the

Exxon Valdez incident continues to leave an incredibly damaging black mark.
Shortly after midnight on March 24, 1989, the tanker was traveling outside of normal shipping lanes to avoid ice, when it struck the Blight Reef in Prince William Sound, Alaska.
Out of the 53 million gallons of crude oil onboard, 11 million gallons were lost in the accident. The size of the spill and its remote location in the pristine Alaskan wilderness made clean-up a horrendous task. Ten million birds, whales, otters and other animals were placed immediately at risk and thousands died.
VIDEO: Gulf Oil Spill Threatens Seafood

NOAA, USGS, Getty Images

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On March 18, 1967, the

Torrey Canyon's entire cargo of 119,000 tons of Kuwait crude oil was lost after the tanker ran aground on Pollard Rock on the Seven Stones Reef off of Lands End, England. The Royal Navy dispatched a clean-up response team within four hours of the grounding.
By March 26, the entire vessel had broken apart, putting an end to any hopes of towing the ship off the reef. The British government eventually decided to bomb it.
BLOG: Dolphin Health 'Grave' After BP Oil Spill

NOAA, United States Coast Guard, AP Photo/Edd

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In the early morning hours of Dec. 15, 1976, the crew of the aging Liberian oil tanker Argo Merchant could not keep control in the rough waves and 50-knot winds during a storm off the coast of Nantucket. The ship ran aground among the Nantucket shoals.
On Dec. 16, the crew was evacuated, and by Dec. 22, the ship had broken into three pieces, spilling all of its 7.7 million barrels of oil into the ocean.
Constant bad weather made salvage attempts very difficult, but environmentalists said damage to local waters were minimal. Strong currents carried the oil away from the Massachusetts shoreline and forced it out to sea.
BLOG: Record Dolphin, Sea Turtle Deaths Since Gulf Spill

NOAA, USGS

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Stormy weather, rough seas and a faulty piece of steering equipment proved to be a fatal combination for the Amoco Cadiz on March 16, 1978.
The enormous vessel -- carrying almost 2 million barrels of oil -- was sailing from the Arabian Gulf to Le Havre, France when it ran aground on Portsall Rocks, three miles off the coast of Brittany, during a severe storm. The entire cargo spilled into the water, creating an oil slick 18 miles wide and 80 miles long, and it wasn't long before the force of the storm caused the ship to break apart.
BLOG: Shipwreck Oil Spill Time Bombs Identified

NOAA, National Institute of Health, Associate

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The only thing worse than one oil tanker exploding and sinking while at sea, is two oil tankers colliding at sea.
During the rage of a tropical storm in the Caribbean, two giant supertankers, the Atlantic Empress and the Aegean Captain , each carrying over 200,000 tons of crude oil, collided near the islands of Trinidad and Tobago on July 19, 1979.
The impact caused enormous, violent fires to break out over both ships. Between the two ships, 26 crew members died and 280,000 tons of crude oil were spilled into the Caribbean. Fortunately, the spills never reach shorelines.
BLOG: World War II Shipwrecks Pose Oil Spill Threat

United Press International; Photo by Hein Hin

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In the Bay of Campeche off the coast of Mexico, 600 miles south of Texas, the company Petroleos Mexicanos (PEMEX) was drilling a 2-mile-deep oil well called IXTOC I.
On June 3, 1979, a loss of drilling mud circulation forced a blowout, causing oil and gas to spew out of the well and ignite. The platform holding the drilling equipment and collecting the oil immediately caught fire and collapsed into the water. Several rescue crews worked for days to try to reach the Blowout Preventer (BOP) -- a large valve used to seal off the surface of a wellhead -- but poor visibility, debris and a long pipeline made it difficult.
The IXTOC I well continued to spill oil at a rate of 10,000 to 30,000 barrels per day until it was finally capped on March 23, 1980 -- nine months after the initial incident. By the time it was capped, over 140 million gallons of oil had seeped into the bay, making it the second worst oil spill disaster in history.

NOAA, United States Coast Guard, Getty Images

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Kuwait oil spills during the Gulf War remain the worst examples of eco-terrorism and are by far the worst oil disasters in history.
Beginning in January 1991 during the Gulf War, the Iraqi Army deliberately spilled millions of barrels of oil in the Persian Gulf. Over 500 Kuwaiti tankers, oil fields and refineries were torched, and 3 to 6 million barrels of oil went up in smoke on a daily basis at the peak of the burnings.
One 6-million-barrel spill covered over 600 square miles of water and the oil traveled as far as 20 miles away out into the Indian Ocean. The environmental and health risks were enormous, with over 90 million barrels of oil lost. Environmental experts deemed the incident 25 times more toxic than the Exxon Valdez.
BLOG: Gulf Hit with Dirty Blizzard After Oil Spill

Environmental Protection Agency, Associated P

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On April 11, 1991, while unloading crude oil onto a floating platform seven miles off the coast of Genoa, Italy, the MT Haven exploded, burned for three days and then sank, spilling over 42 million gallons of oil in its wake into the Mediterranean Sea. The Italian and French coastlines were polluted for 12 years after the accident.

United Nations Environmental Programme, NOAA,

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When the huge oil tanker

Prestige wrecked about 130 miles of the coast of Galicia, Spain during a storm on Nov. 19, 2002.
The ship broke apart and sank to the bottom as it spilled over 1.5 to 2 million gallons of oil into the Atlantic Ocean. Three massive "black tides" soiled 125 miles of Spanish coastline within two weeks after the accident.
Considered to be twice as big as the Exxon Valdez accident, the Prestige accident remains the worst oil spill in Spain's history.

Universidad de la Coruña, NOAA, Getty Images

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An oil well blow out in the Gulf of Mexico on April 20, 2010, caused an offshore oil drilling platform to explode and sink, killing 11 men onboard.
Government scientists declared the Deepwater Horizon spill the largest in U.S. history -- with twice as much oil spilled than in the Exxon Valdez disaster.
PHOTOS: Alarming Images of Oil-Drenched Gulf

Anthony looks at the dire state of perhaps the most interesting and diverse part of our planet.

DCI

Investigative Committee spokesman Vladimir Markin said a criminal probe for piracy undertaken by an organized group had been opened over Greenpeace's September 18 protest on a Gazprom oil rig in the Barents Sea.

"It should be noted that all persons who attacked the (oil) platform, regardless of their citizenship, will be brought to criminal responsibility," Markin said in a statement.

The Dutch-flagged Arctic Sunrise had been monitoring the exploration activities of Gazprom since August in the hope of exposing the dangers of drilling for oil in one of the world's great nature reserves.

Russian security forces seized the global environmental lobby group's ship and its 30-member crew a day after two activists from Finland and Switzerland climbed up the side of a Gazprom platform to draw attention to its controversial work.

The two were detained after Russian navy patrol boats opened warning shots at the ship. They and the entire crew were later placed under arrest and locked up in the Arctic Sunrise's mess.

The group says the Russian action was illegal because the Arctic Sunrise was in international waters at the time of the raid.

But Markin argued that the Greenpeace ship was located "in the exclusive economic zone of the Russian Federation" when it was boarded by agents from Russia's Federal Security Service (the main successor to the Soviet-era KGB).

It was not immediately clear from Markin's comments whether the investigation had been launched against just the two activists who had attempted to scale the platform or all activists on board the ship.

The Arctic Sunrise was approaching the shoreline of Russia's Far Northern city of Murmansk on Tuesday after being tugged from the scene of the action by a Russian border guards boat.